海南省海南中學(xué)2021屆高三上學(xué)期第四次月考英語(yǔ)試題 Word版缺答案

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1、海南省海南中學(xué)2021屆高三上學(xué)期第四次月考英語(yǔ)試題 Word版缺答案 海南中學(xué)2021 屆高三第四次月考英語(yǔ)試卷 第Ⅰ卷第一部 分聽力(略)(共兩節(jié),滿分30 分)第二部分閱 讀理解(共兩節(jié),滿分40 分)第一節(jié) (共15 小題;每小題 2 分,滿分30 分) A Next week will see a lot of activities at Christmas Hill Park, where Gilroy’s annual Garlic Festival will begin on July 25th. Tents will be set up, shade cover

2、ings will appear and volunteers will rush about the grounds, preparing for the crowds that will come to our fair city. I’ll be in the crowd too Friday and Saturday─working─wandering and taking note of interesting things. One fun thing I’v e been assgined this year is to hang out at the

3、free garlic ice cream booth, taking photos and getting reactions from folks who taste the unique treat for the first time. Though I wo n’t participate in the ice cream─if there were enough for me─I’ll take a sandwich and some garlic bread, which are my personal festival staples. If you’re a local

4、 who perhaps wants in and out quickly, simply to pick up some great food that weekend, you’re in luck. New this year, residents of Gilroy, Morgan Hill, San Martin, Hollister, San Juan Bautista or Aroma can purchase a three-day pass for $30. The pass is only available at the gate on July 25th and gi

5、ves you access to all food, concerts and events every day of the festival. For anyone who di dn’t catch last year’s Garlic Showdown, hosted by Carla Hall, let me suggest you check it out this time around. I sat in the stands as a spectator last year and was thoroughly entertained by the chefs

6、and host of “the Chew”, who returns as master of ceremonies fot the July 27 Showdown. It seems Carla Hall is a great match for the Garlic Festival, adding a big spoonful of humor to an otherwise serious cooking competition. You could be a great match too, if you stop by the Be the Match

7、registry─hosted by the Gilroy Rotary Club─outside the festival wine pavilion(看臺(tái)). Perhaps, for one reason or another, you’re unable to attend the festival this year, but you still want to see photos and read updates about what’s going on at Christmas Hill Park. Your local newspaper staff is all ove

8、r it. 21. The purpose of the author in the passage is to . A. introduce the activities at Gilroy Garlic Festival. B. make an advertisement for the Garlic Festival C. show the importance of holding Garlic Festival D. imply he will take charge of the Garlic Festival 22. What will the author do

9、 at the Garlic Festival? A. He will do his business at the ice cream booth. B. He will offer fress ice cream to the coming folks. C. He will know how people find the special ice cream. D. He will sell sandwiches and some garlic bread. 23. Getting a three-day pass for $30 means you . A. can g

10、o to the Garlic Festival any time B. should be offered the expensive food C. should make preparations for the festival D. have to be one of the local residents 24. It can be inferred from the passage that . A. almost no one will miss the best opportunities B. Chrismas Hill Park will witness a

11、 crowded scene C. some people dislike holding such activities D. most people want to see pictures in the papers B 2021 Exhibitions in the British M us eum Sunken cities: Egypt’s lost worlds 19 May -27 November 2021 Sainsbury Exhibitions Gallery Adults£16.50, Members/under 16s free Sunken un

12、der the sea for over a thousand years, two lost cities of ancient Egypt were lately rediscovered. Their amazing discovery is transforming our understanding of the deep connections between the great ancient civilizations of Egypt and Greece. Their story is told for the first time in this

13、exhibition. Francis Towne’s watercolours of Rome 21 January -14 August 2021 Room 90/ Open late Fridays Free, just drop in Come and experience 18th-century Rome through an astonishing series of watercolours not displayed together since 1805. Sicily: culture and conquest 21 April -14 September

14、2021 Room 35 Tickets: Adults£10, Members/under 16s free This exhibition tells Sicil y’s fascinating stories -f rom the arrival of the Greeks and other settlers, to the extraordinary period of enlightenment(啟蒙) under Norman rule in the 11th to 13thcenturies. Early British exploration of the clas

15、sical world 14 March -27 July 2021 Room 90a/ Open late Fridays Free, just drop in This small display features a remarkable selection of drawings by British explorers and architects, who discovered and documented some of Sici ly’s best surviving classical sculpture and architecture. 25. Which pl

16、ace does Francis Towne’s works picture? A. Egypt. B. France. C. Rome. D. Sicily. 26. What art works are housed in Room 90a? A. Drawings. B. Buildings. C. Sculptures. D. Watercolours. 27. Which exhibition can you attend in October? A. Sicily: culture and conquest B. Sunken cities: Egypt’s

17、 lost worlds C. Francis Town e’s watercolours of Rome D. Early British exploration of the classical world What do you think of when you think of face painted white? A shirt with stripes? White gloves and a black hat? In the West this figure might come to mind when we think of mime. Mime it the a

18、rt of acting without using speech. The word can also refer to a person who performs this art. This type of art has grown and changed over the centuries. What began as a simple form of communication is now a form of theater. Mime is one of the earliest forms of self-expression. As languages were dev

19、eloping, humans still used their bodies to speak. Mime first became an art form in ancient Greece. Silent actors performed everyday scenes using gestures. These plays often taught a lesson about values. When the Romans got control of Greece, they took the art of mime to Italy. There they made it the

20、ir own. Even after the fall of the Roman Empire, mime remained. In the mid-1500s mime became a form of street performance in Italy. Mimers wore masks and acted out comedies. Because masks hid their faces, they could make fun of any aspect of society. Everyone enjoyed the performance—young and old,

21、 rich and poor. Mime also traveled around Europe. Because the art had no words, there was no language barrier. Mime became especially popular in France. French performers created famous mime characters like Pierrort and Bip. These characters helped shape today’s mime. Want to try mime? To communi

22、cate only through body language; no talking allowed. Watch people’s facial expressions and gestures closely and practice copying them. Create a story to act out—this will be more interesting to your audience. No props? No worries! You can create anything you need out of thin air. The most importa

23、nt thing is to believe your illusion. If you believe it’s real, your audience will, too! 28. The second paragraph implies that mimes . A. actions speak louder than words B. actors have their faces painted colorful C. performers are mostly deaf actors D. gestures are mixed with words sometimes

24、 29. In ancient Greece, mime was performed to . A. call on people to fight against the Romans B. teach viewers a value in daily life C. admire the founding the Roman Empiree D. act as a form of communication 30.To act a mime, the most important is your . A. expressions B.costumes C.gestures

25、 D.imagination 31. The best title for the passage may be . A. The art of mime B. The value of mime C. The origin fo mime D. The reform of mime Now here’s something Helen Keller coul dn’t have dreamed up: the picture book Goodnight Moon, but with all the pictures─the cats, the socks and cloc

26、k, the mouse and little house─ come to life in sculptural 3-D. Researchers at the University of Colorado, Boulder already have imagined it. And they, along with others in the Tactile(觸覺的) Picture Books Project, have made it ─as well as 3-D printed versions of Harold and the Purple Crayon and Th

27、e very Hungry Caterpillar. Tactile books for little readers have long existed, of course, with pieces of felt and textured (手摸時(shí)有感覺的) patches (斑點(diǎn)) perfect for small fingertips to touch. And other organizations, like the American Printing House for the Blind and the National Braille Press, are also

28、 exploring the tactile-books space. But theTactile Picture Books Project takes touch books to a new level, kindness of 3-D printing. The promising technology opens up the possibility of fast, customizable(定做的), sculptured versions of a 2-D books. One final goal: to allow parents to tea

29、r a photo out of a 2-D book page, send it to printer and─oh! ─get a 3-D version of the same. Another: to develop a library of graphics(圖形) that can be printed on the fly. There’s a long way to go, in terms of possibility, says Abigale Stangl, one of the researchers. But she says it’s well worth i

30、t. The more a visually impaired child (視障孩子)explores her world with touch, the more capable she becomes, Stangl says. “Our focus is really looking at children who are in the stages of growing literacy…and how can parents help create an experience to help children understand that books contain kn

31、owledge and develop a comfort books and feeling the envirnment,”says Stangl. But how to tell if a child is really engaging with tactile books? Stangl says the team is exploring different ways of testing engagement(參與度). Sensors might detect how long a child is touching the page and whether that

32、links to attention, or capturing the interaction between the child and parent. Sounds like true universal design: Little is more sacred (神圣的) across cultures than a good bedtime story. 32. According to Paragraph 1, Helen Keller never thought . A. books would be printed with pictures B. technol

33、ogy might bring animals in books to life C. the blind could read picture books one day D. picture books could be popular with blind readers 33. The aim of the Tactile Picture Book Project is to . A. buld a library for 3-D books. B. get a book printed in a short time C. develop touch books

34、 for readers D. turn 2-D books into 3-D version quickly 34. The underlined phrase “ on the fly” may mean . A. in a hurry B. at length C. with effort D. in the air 35. According to Stangl, researchers tried to . A. make children at ease with feeling the world B. have an experience of exp

35、loring the world C. understand the source of book knowledge D. have a feeling to protect the environment 第二節(jié)(共 5 小題;每小題 2 分,共10 分) Every story starts with a general idea. Whether it’s “y oung woman survives robot disaster ” or “remains of humanity on a spaceship bound for new world”. 36

36、 A nd it’s always the first thing you come up with when you’re planning your next project, even if you don’t recognize you have it. A lot of times, the ideas grows so quickly into a blossoming novel-length tale that you might not realize it’s there, hiding in the background. But it is. And as

37、 many experienced writers know all too well, that idea lurking (潛藏) in the shadows can be foundation for more than one story. 37 Now, that doesn’t sound so bad in theory, sure. There are so many great ideas you can pick from! But here’s the thing: a vast number of those potential stories…ar en

38、’t so great. When you start plotting your novel, drawing it out in various directions from the premise(上 述各項(xiàng)), the first story you decide to tell might not be the right one for you. 38 It might have been the right one for you years ago. It might be the right one in the future. Or it may never

39、 be the right one simply because it’s a terrible story. Whatever the basic reason, the fact is that a large number of possible directions you can take an idea to develop it into a full story just aren’t the right directions for you. 39 In general, the more experience you gain as a writer, the e

40、asier it becomes to tell which story ideas are working and which ones aren’t--- thus helping you prevent writing a whole story you eventually realize is totally wrong for your purposes. 40 So when you realize you’ve gone the wrong way, it’s not the end of the world. It’s simply a

41、sign that you have more to learn as a writer. A. All writers make mistakes. B. An idea is the seed from which a story grows. C. They don’t match your skills and your goals. D. It happens to every writer. E. And that is a valueable skill to build. F. It might be the right one for some other wr

42、iters. G. It has the potential to be the foundation of a thousand stories. 第三部分英語(yǔ)知識(shí)應(yīng)用 第一節(jié)完形填空(共20 小題;每小題 1.5 分,滿分30 分) In a book, author Issac Asimov tells an incident when he was interviewed by television reporter Barbara Walters. She asked him how many 41 he had written and then asked, “

43、 Do n’t you ever want to do anything but write?” He said, “ No.” She 42 on. “Don’t you want to do hunting? Fishing? Dancing? Hiking?” This time he answered, “ No! No! No! And No!” She continued, “ But what would you do 43 the doctor gave you only six months to live?” He said, “44

44、 faster.” Issac Asimov spent his life doing what 45 . I am aware that there are those people who find no satisfaciton or 46 from making a living. They don’t like what they do and they live for weekends and holidays. Some of them feel 47 and believe they can’t make a meaningful c

45、hange because they do n’t have the skills, education, money or 48 situations. So they decide to dig in and keep on struggling forward. I do n’t want to say they are 49 , for there are many reasons we each choose our individual paths. But I’m drawn to a 50 expressed so clea

46、rly by Norman Cousins. “The tragedy of life is not death, ”says Cousins, “but what we let 51 inside of us while we live. ”I agree. Death is not a tragedy 52 itself. All of us will die. It is as 53 as birth. The tragedy is while we 54 what we let die inside us. Like a 55

47、 to be or do something that is calling to us from someplace deep. The real 56 of life is settling for less while something dies inside us. Leaving what feels secure behind and 57 the signing of our hearts doesn’t always end as we expect or hope. We may even 58 . But here’s the p

48、ayoff: it can also be amazing and wonderful and greatly 59 . In the end, we really only have one question when it comes to 60 an important dream. It is whether we will say yes. 4 A. songs B.articles C. books D. poems 4 A. went B.depended C. talked D. moved 4 A

49、. unless B.because C. though D. if 4 A. run B.write C. drive D. go 4 A. imagined B.remembered C. learned D. loved 4 A. way B. interest C. joy D. 4 A. trapped B. excited C. frightened D. confused 4 A. severe B. favourable C. stable D

50、. complex 4 A. rude B. poor C. selfish D. wrong 5 A. truth B. theory C. principle D. concept 5 A. complain B.worry C. die D. rot 5 A. by B. in C. on D. of 5 A. B. strange C. ordinary D. natural 5 A. live B. work C. sleep D. play

51、5 A. chance B. passion C. challenge D. 5 A. value B. aim C. tragedy D. reward 5 A. giving B. devoting C. receiving D. 5 A. fail B. struggle C. bear D. succeed 5 A. puzzling B. boring C. D. 6 A. dreaming B. chasing C. quitting D.

52、value 第三部分英語(yǔ)知識(shí)應(yīng)用 第Ⅱ卷 第二節(jié)語(yǔ)法填空(共10 小題;每小題 1.5 分,滿分15 分) Recently I failed an exam. However, 61 I came out of my teachers office, I told myself, "Smile! Its not so serious." I smiled a big smile and it 62 (work) a little, really. Everyone gets 63 (frustrate) sometimes.I use

53、d to be always influenced by pressure and I was often in low spirits. But one day I came_ 64 a sentence in the Bible, "Do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for 65 (it). Let the days own trouble be sufficient for the day."It suddenly struck me, "

54、 66 (worry) about a problem doesnt help. Why not just give a big smile and face up to the trouble?" Now every time I want to cry, I remind myself that 67 (laugh) is better than tears and anger.I 68 (convince) that theres something magical about a smile.A smile helps me recover con

55、fidence and gives me the courage to move on. Remember, whenever youre faced with a setback, whenever youve been treated 69 (fair), all it takes is determination and you can feel happy again.Smile at life, _ 70 _it will shine on you. 第四部分寫作 第一節(jié)短文改錯(cuò)(共10 小題;每小題 1 分,共10 分) Last summer I learn

56、t to ride a bicycle. At first, I was able to control its direction. Sometimes I fall to the right or to the left. I was worrying, asking my father patiently why he could not ride straight. So he didnt answer me directly. Instead of, he took me to side of the street. "Can you find bike tracks that i

57、s really straight?" asked my father. I watched careful and shook my head. "No" he said. "In fact, none of the tracks is always straight. But just by correct the direction every now and then, you had already gone forward." 第二節(jié)書面表達(dá)(滿分25 分)中國(guó)科學(xué)家建造的世界上最大單口徑球面射電望遠(yuǎn)鏡(簡(jiǎn)稱FAST),于 2021 年 9 月25 號(hào)建成并進(jìn)入了測(cè)試階段,舉世矚目,請(qǐng)你根據(jù)以下信息和要 。 求為你校的英文報(bào)寫一篇報(bào)道,題目已經(jīng)給出(不計(jì)入總詞數(shù)) 一、地點(diǎn):中國(guó)貴州省平塘縣;大?。杭s30 個(gè)足球場(chǎng)大;工程投資:12 億 元;歷時(shí):5 年半;應(yīng)用:有助于尋找更多奇異天體,更好地探索宇宙。 二、你的感想 The world’s largest radio telescope begins testing

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